IAB: Hispanic Audience Active Online, On Mobile

A new study by the Interactive Advertising Bureau reinforces prior research showing that the U.S. Hispanic market has a strong presence online and on
mobile devices. The “Digital Hispanic Consumer” report indicates that Latinos have higher-than-average representation in areas like
e-commerce and digital media and social media use.

The findings were based on an IAB analysis of a survey of 25,000 U.S. consumers (including the Hispanic population) conducted by
research firm BIGInsight, compared with a sample of 4,325 U.S. Hispanics. The survey was fielded in both Spanish and English between April 24 and June 11, 2012.

Based on the results,
the top five online activities for Hispanics include:

Even as more
online traffic shifts from the desktop to mobile devices, Hispanics are more likely to go online via a mobile device than average users and are more likely to own an iPhone, Android device and iPad.
Given that data, it’s not so surprising that Hispanic users are less likely to own a desktop computer (40%) than consumers generally (48%).

“Hispanic consumers are living
their lives on the go and lean on their mobile devices accordingly,” said Pam Goodfellow, consumer insights director at BIGinsight. “Brand leaders would be well-served to recognize the
economic power of the Hispanic community and harness their appetite for goods, services and online content -- especially via mobile devices.”

The most popular mobile activities
among Hispanics were text messaging (56%), viewing email (42%) and taking a picture or video (39%). When it comes to watching video, via mobile or otherwise, Latinos also demonstrated higher rates of
adoption:

Likewise, Nielsen research released in April showed that Hispanics were more likely than their white and African-American counterparts to
watch Netflix on their computers, but on par with Asians.

The IAB report found that Hispanics more broadly are optimistic as consumers, with just over half being confident about the
economy compared to one-third of Americans generally. With that outlook, they are also more likely than average to make the following purchases in the next six months:

The report also suggested that language plays an important role in the
media Latinos use. Hispanic participants in the survey were bilingual, English-dominant, with 75% speaking English more than half of the time at home. But more than half (54%) said that they
consistently engage with Spanish-language media.